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Former US President Joe Biden's ex-doctor refuses to answer Congress queries

Former US President Joe Biden's ex-doctor refuses to answer Congress queries

7NEWS6 days ago
Former US president Joe Biden's White House physician has refused to answer questions as part of a House of Representatives Republican investigation into Biden's health in office.
Dr Kevin O'Connor invoked his rights under the fifth amendment during a closed-door interview with the House Oversight Committee, his lawyer and politicians said.
Republicans on the Oversight Committee subpoenaed O'Connor last month as part of a sweeping investigation into Biden's health and his mental fitness as president.
They assert some policies carried out during Biden's term through the use of the White House autopen may be illegitimate if it is proven the Democrat was mentally incapacitated for some of his term.
Biden has strongly denied that he was not in a right state of mind at any point while in office, calling the claims 'ridiculous and false'.
David Schertler, one of O'Connor's lawyers, said the doctor had 'no choice' but to invoke his fifth amendment rights in testimony before the committee.
Schertler cited both O'Connor's responsibilities to protect patient privacy as a doctor and the Justice Department's ongoing investigation into Biden's use of the autopen.
Representative James Comer of Kentucky, the Oversight chair, said O'Connor's refusal to testify made it 'clear there was a conspiracy'.
'The American people demand transparency but Dr O'Connor would rather conceal the truth,' Comer said in a statement.
Witnesses routinely invoke their fifth amendment rights in testimony to Congress.
Other Biden aides approached
Allies of President Donald Trump, for example, invoked their rights when refusing to testify to the committee that investigated the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol by a mob of his supporters.
Comer has sought testimony from nearly a dozen former Biden aides as he conducts his investigation, including former White House chiefs of staff Ron Klain and Jeff Zients; former senior advisers Mike Donilon and Anita Dunn.
Testimonies were also sought from former deputy chief of staff Bruce Reed, former counsellor to the president Steve Ricchetti, former deputy chief of staff Annie Tomasini and a former assistant to the president, Ashley Williams.
He has also issued a subpoena for Anthony Bernal, the former chief of staff to former first lady Jill Biden.
Trump's White House has waived executive privilege, a right that protects many communications between the president and staff from Congress and the courts, for almost all of those senior staffers.
That clears the way for those staffers to discuss their conversations with Biden while he was president.
Representative Robert Garcia of California, the top Democrat on the Oversight panel, dismissed the Republican investigation as a waste of time.
'Oversight Republicans could be working to lower costs for American families and conducting oversight of President Trump's corruption but instead are obsessed with the past,' he said.
Comer has said his committee will release a report of all its findings after the probe is complete.
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Rogue Trump impeachment efforts divide Democrats
Rogue Trump impeachment efforts divide Democrats

7NEWS

time4 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Rogue Trump impeachment efforts divide Democrats

House Democrats have been publicly grappling with the issue of impeaching President Donald Trump, with grassroots activists pressuring lawmakers to more aggressively confront Trump and centrist members of the party dismissing the push as futile. During a six-week stretch this year, House Democrats twice were confronted with impeachment votes — forced by their own rank-and-file members — that had zero chance of passing, given that Republicans control the chamber. In May, Democratic leaders convinced Shri Thanedar (Michigan) to back off his impeachment push at the last minute. But the following month, Al Green (Texas), forced a failed vote to impeach Trump, exposing stark divisions among Democrats and putting the party's vulnerable members in a difficult position ahead of next year's midterm elections. 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